TCL just showed off a new desktop robot at Mobile World Congress in Barcelona. It’s called the Tbot, and it pairs with the company’s kids smartwatches. The idea is straightforward, when a child takes the watch off to charge, the Tbot keeps things going at home.
The device holds the watch with a magnetic dock while it powers up. But it does more than charge. TCL positions the Tbot as an AI companion that steps in during those off-wrist moments. It can handle morning alarms, study timers, and bedtime stories. The goal is to create a sense of continuity for kids moving from the playground to the living room.
The Tbot handles routines, learning, and bedtime
When you dock the watch, the Tbot gets to work. It acts as an AI assistant that helps kids build daily habits. A timer for homework sessions, for example. A gentle reminder when it is time to wind down for bed. The guidance is meant to feel supportive rather than bossy.
It also works as a learning partner. Kids can explore topics they are curious about, and the Tbot offers age-appropriate support along the way. At night, it shifts into sleep companion mode and tells calming stories to help little ones settle.
Parents can also enable it to send configurable notifications and alerts. That way, adults stay in the loop without hovering.
An AI companion built for the living room
TCL isn’t just throwing AI features at a robot and calling it a day. The company is trying to solve a specific problem. Kids smartwatches are great for location tracking and quick calls outside the house. But once the kid is home, that connection usually pauses.
The thinking goes like this: Use the watch for outdoor safety, use the Tbot for indoor routines. The magnetic dock keeps the watch charged and ready, while the Tbot takes over as a stationary companion.
It is a secondary gadget, not a replacement for anything. TCL wants smart connectivity to feel supportive, not distracting.
The Tbot is still a concept for now
Before you get too attached to the idea, a reality check. The Tbot is a concept. TCL brought it to MWC to show where its head is at with AI and family tech, not to launch a product you can buy tomorrow. There is no price. No release date. No word on which markets might see it first.
TCL says it is developing the device with regulations in mind. AI features will require parental permission. So the company is thinking about privacy and control from the start.
For now, the Tbot is a glimpse of what could come next. A desktop pal that keeps the smartwatch experience alive at home. If it ever hits the market, expect more details on compatibility and real-world availability. Until then, file this one under nice ideas that might not see a store shelf anytime soon.






